Emancipation, the Media, and Modernity: Arguments about the Media and Social Theory

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Oxford University Press, 2000 - Social Science - 206 pages
This book adopts a polemical stance. It approaches the problems raised by the media by way of a set of arguments with the two dominant paradigms now current for thinking about the media: post-modernism and Information Society theory. It argues that the media are important because they raise a set of questions that have been central to social and political theory since the Enlightenment.

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About the author (2000)


Nicholas Garnham is Professor of Media Studies, University of Westminster

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