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Split Signals: Television and Politics in the Soviet Union by Mickiewicz, Ellen
by Mickiewicz, Ellen | PB | VeryGood
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- 賣家備註
- Binding
- Paperback
- Weight
- 0 lbs
- Product Group
- Book
- IsTextBook
- No
- ISBN
- 9780195063196
- Book Title
- Split Signals : Television and Politics in the Soviet Union
- Item Length
- 8in
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press, Incorporated
- Publication Year
- 1990
- Format
- Trade Paperback
- Language
- English
- Item Height
- 0.9in
- Features
- Reprint
- Genre
- History, Performing Arts, Political Science
- Topic
- Political Process / Media & Internet, Russia & the Former Soviet Union, Television / History & Criticism, Television / General
- Item Width
- 5.1in
- Item Weight
- 12.8 Oz
- Number of Pages
- 304 Pages
關於產品
Product Information
Television has changed drastically in the Soviet Union over the last three decades. In 1960, only five percent of the population had access to TV, but now the viewing population has reached near total saturation. Today's main source of information in the USSR, television has become Mikhail Gorbachev's most powerful instrument for paving the way for major reform. Containing a wealth of interviews with major Soviet and American media figures and fascinating descriptions of Soviet TV shows, Ellen Mickiewicz's wide-ranging, vividly written volume compares over one hundred hours of Soviet and American television, covering programs broadcast during both the Chernenko and Gorbachev governments. Mickiewicz describes the enormous significance and popularity of news programs and discusses how Soviet journalists work in the United States. Offering a fascinating depiction of the world seen on Soviet TV, she also explores the changes in programming that have occurred as a result of glasnost .
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0195063198
ISBN-13
9780195063196
eBay Product ID (ePID)
1960987
Product Key Features
Book Title
Split Signals : Television and Politics in the Soviet Union
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Features
Reprint
Topic
Political Process / Media & Internet, Russia & the Former Soviet Union, Television / History & Criticism, Television / General
Publication Year
1990
Genre
History, Performing Arts, Political Science
Number of Pages
304 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
8in
Item Height
0.9in
Item Width
5.1in
Item Weight
12.8 Oz
Additional Product Features
Edition Description
Reprint
Reviews
"A scholarly but readable study of television under Chernenko and Gorbachev....Draws illuminating comparisons with American television and will prove very valuable for those studying Soviet-American relations, as well as anyone interested in the Soviet media."--International Affairs "A good guide to the recent past, but also useful for its descriptions of reality below politics and politically based contention....The thoughts at the end on the possibilities and strains within glasnost are also illuminating."--Intermedia "Likely to raise eyebrows in the West, especially among those who continue to think of life behind the Iron Curtain as a sort of backwater--but Mickiewicz demonstrates conclusively that there may be, indeed, more to glasnost than many believe."--Kirkus Reviews "With systematic analysis of the content of television programs, interviews with media people, extensive use of Soviet sources, and fascinating material comparing Soviet and American cases, Mickiewicz has produced the first study of television in the Soviet Union."--Zbigniew Brzezinski "Mickiewicz, America's foremost student of Soviet media, has conducted a detailed exploration in terra incognita and returned with fascinating, useful, and timely insights....Split Signals makes it possible to appreciate the impact of glasnost on television and, in turn, of television on perestroika--and does it in a readable and comprehensive manner."--Ambassador Ralph Earle II, "A scholarly but readable study of television under Chernenko and Gorbachev....Draws illuminating comparisons with American television and will prove very valuable for those studying Soviet-American relations, as well as anyone interested in the Soviet media."--International Affairs"A good guide to the recent past, but also useful for its descriptions of reality below politics and politically based contention....The thoughts at the end on the possibilities and strains within glasnost are also illuminating."--Intermedia"Likely to raise eyebrows in the West, especially among those who continue to think of life behind the Iron Curtain as a sort of backwater--but Mickiewicz demonstrates conclusively that there may be, indeed, more to glasnost than many believe."--Kirkus Reviews"With systematic analysis of the content of television programs, interviews with media people, extensive use of Soviet sources, and fascinating material comparing Soviet and American cases, Mickiewicz has produced the first study of television in the Soviet Union."--Zbigniew Brzezinski"Mickiewicz, America's foremost student of Soviet media, has conducted a detailed exploration in terra incognita and returned with fascinating, useful, and timely insights....Split Signals makes it possible to appreciate the impact of glasnost on television and, in turn, of television on perestroika--and does it in a readable and comprehensive manner."--Ambassador Ralph Earle II, "A scholarly but readable study of television under Chernenko and Gorbachev....Draws illuminating comparisons with American television and will prove very valuable for those studying Soviet-American relations, as well as anyone interested in the Soviet media."--International Affairs "A good guide to the recent past, but also useful for its descriptions of reality below politics and politically based contention....The thoughts at the end on the possibilities and strains withinglasnostare also illuminating."--Intermedia "Likely to raise eyebrows in the West, especially among those who continue to think of life behind the Iron Curtain as a sort of backwater--but Mickiewicz demonstrates conclusively that there may be, indeed, more toglasnostthan many believe."--Kirkus Reviews "With systematic analysis of the content of television programs, interviews with media people, extensive use of Soviet sources, and fascinating material comparing Soviet and American cases, Mickiewicz has produced the first study of television in the Soviet Union."--Zbigniew Brzezinski "Mickiewicz, America's foremost student of Soviet media, has conducted a detailed exploration interra incognitaand returned with fascinating, useful, and timely insights....Split Signalsmakes it possible to appreciate the impact ofglasnoston television and, in turn, of television onperestroika--and does it in a readable and comprehensive manner."--Ambassador Ralph Earle II, "A scholarly but readable study of television under Chernenko and Gorbachev....Draws illuminating comparisons with American television and will prove very valuable for those studying Soviet-American relations, as well as anyone interested in the Soviet media."--International Affairs"A good guide to the recent past, but also useful for its descriptions of reality below politics and politically based contention....The thoughts at the end on the possibilities and strains within glasnost are also illuminating."--Intermedia"Likely to raise eyebrows in the West, especially among those who continue to think of life behind the Iron Curtain as a sort of backwater--but Mickiewicz demonstrates conclusively that there may be, indeed, more to glasnost than many believe."--Kirkus Reviews"With systematic analysis of the content of television programs, interviews with media people, extensive use of Soviet sources, and fascinating material comparing Soviet and American cases, Mickiewicz has produced the first study of television in the Soviet Union."--Zbigniew Brzezinski"Mickiewicz, America's foremost student of Soviet media, has conducted a detailed exploration in terra incognita and returned with fascinating, useful, and timely insights....Split Signals makes it possible to appreciate the impact of glasnost on television and, in turn, of television on perestroika--and does it in a readable and comprehensive manner."--Ambassador Ralph Earle II"A scholarly but readable study of television under Chernenko and Gorbachev....Draws illuminating comparisons with American television and will prove very valuable for those studying Soviet-American relations, as well as anyone interested in the Soviet media."--International Affairs"A good guide to the recent past, but also useful for its descriptions of reality below politics and politically based contention....The thoughts at the end on the possibilities and strains within glasnost are also illuminating."--Intermedia"Likely to raise eyebrows in the West, especially among those who continue to think of life behind the Iron Curtain as a sort of backwater--but Mickiewicz demonstrates conclusively that there may be, indeed, more to glasnost than many believe."--Kirkus Reviews"With systematic analysis of the content of television programs, interviews with media people, extensive use of Soviet sources, and fascinating material comparing Soviet and American cases, Mickiewicz has produced the first study of television in the Soviet Union."--Zbigniew Brzezinski"Mickiewicz, America's foremost student of Soviet media, has conducted a detailed exploration in terra incognita and returned with fascinating, useful, and timely insights....Split Signals makes it possible to appreciate the impact of glasnost on television and, in turn, of television on perestroika--and does it in a readable and comprehensive manner."--Ambassador Ralph Earle II"A groundbreaking effort....[It] comes at a very important time when both the Soviets and the U.S. are telling their people a lot more about each other."--Flora Lewis, Foreign Affairs Columnist for The New York Times"A fascinating study of Soviet television....Detailed and thoroughly documented....An authoritative study."--American Political Science Review"Though Mickiewicz's academic credentials are impeccable...Split Signals is a very readable book, almost completely devoid of professional jargon."--The Village Voice Literary Supplement"The intent and implications of glasnost come alive in Mickiewicz's examination of new television programs, old political controls, and a mix of restraints and opportunities involved in Mikhail Gorbachev's economic, political, and media reforms....Impressive...a solid study."--Journalism Quarterly, "A scholarly but readable study of television under Chernenko and Gorbachev....Draws illuminating comparisons with American television and will prove very valuable for those studying Soviet-American relations, as well as anyone interested in the Soviet media."-- International Affairs "A good guide to the recent past, but also useful for its descriptions of reality below politics and politically based contention....The thoughts at the end on the possibilities and strains within glasnost are also illuminating."-- Intermedia "Likely to raise eyebrows in the West, especially among those who continue to think of life behind the Iron Curtain as a sort of backwater--but Mickiewicz demonstrates conclusively that there may be, indeed, more to glasnost than many believe."-- Kirkus Reviews "With systematic analysis of the content of television programs, interviews with media people, extensive use of Soviet sources, and fascinating material comparing Soviet and American cases, Mickiewicz has produced the first study of television in the Soviet Union."--Zbigniew Brzezinski "Mickiewicz, America's foremost student of Soviet media, has conducted a detailed exploration in terra incognita and returned with fascinating, useful, and timely insights.... Split Signals makes it possible to appreciate the impact of glasnost on television and, in turn, of television on perestroika --and does it in a readable and comprehensive manner."--Ambassador Ralph Earle II
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