AlthusserL. (1971). Ideology and ideological state apparatuses. In L. Althusser, Lenin and philosophy, and other essays (B. Brewster, Trans.). London: NLB.
6.
AndersonR.DardenneR.KillenbergG. M. (1994). The conversation of journalism: Communication, community and news. Westport, Conn. & London: Praeger.
7.
BakhtinM. M. (1981). The dialogic imagination: Four essays (HolquistM., Ed.; C. Emerson & M. Holquist, Trans.). Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press.
8.
BarneyR. D. (1997). A dangerous drift? The sirens' call to collectivism. In BlackJ., Mixed news: The public/civic/communitarian journalism debate (pp. 72–90). Mahwah, N.J.: Erlbaum.
9.
BaudrillardJ. (1981). For a critique of the political economy of the sign (C. Levin, Trans.). St. Louis: Telos.
10.
BennettW. L. (1996). News: The politics of illusion (3rd ed.). White Plains, N.Y.: Longman.
11.
BergerA. A. (1996). Narratives in popular culture, media and everyday life. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage.
12.
BlumlerJ. G.GurevitchM. (1996). The crisis of public communication. London & New York: Routledge.
13.
BoundasC. V. (1993). The Deleuze reader. New York: Columbia University Press.
14.
BourdieuP. (1977). Outline of a theory of practice (R. Nice, Trans.). Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.
15.
BramanS. (1995). Symposium: Horizons of the state: Information policy and power. Journal of Communication, 45 (4), 4–24. Entire issue devoted to media and the state.
16.
BungeM. (1996). In praise of intolerance to charlatanism in academia. In GrossLevittLewis, The flight from science and reason (pp. 96–116).
17.
BurkeP. (1990). The French historical revolution: The Annales School, 1929–89. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
18.
CareyJ. W. (1975). A cultural approach to communication. Communication2(1), 1–22.
19.
CareyJ. W. (1988). Media, myths, and narratives: Television and the press. Newbury Park, Calif., London, & New Delhi: Sage.
20.
CirinoR. (1974). Power to persuade: Mass media and the news. Toronto, New York, & London: Bantam.
21.
CohenS.YoungJ. (1973). The manufacture of news: A reader. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage.
22.
DeleuzeG.GuattariF. (1977). Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and schizophrenia (R. Hurley, M. Seem, & H. R. Lane, Trans.). New York: Viking.
23.
DerridaJ. (1976). Of Grammatology (G. C. Spivak, Trans.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
24.
DervinB.GrossbergL.O'KeefeB. J.WartellaE. (1989). Rethinking communication (Vol. 1): Paradigm issues. Newbury Park, Calif.: Sage.
25.
EagletonT. (1991). Ideology: An introduction. New York: Verso.
26.
EasonD. (1990). The new journalism and the image-world. In SimsN., Literary journalism in the twentieth century (pp. 191–205). New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.
27.
FishmanM. (1980). Manufacturing the news. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press.
28.
ForgacsD. (1988). A Gramsci reader: Selected writings, 1916–1935. New York: Schocken.
29.
FoucaultM. (1977). Language, counter-memory, practice: Selected essays and interviews (BouchardD. F.BouchardD. F.SimonS., Trans.). Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
30.
FoucaultM. (1978). History of sexuality (Vol. 1) (R. Hurley, Trans.). New York: Pantheon, with subsequent volumes published by Vintage.
31.
FoucaultM. (1980). Power/knowledge: Selected interviews and other writings, 1972–77 (GordonC., Ed. and Trans.). New York: Pantheon.
32.
FrankenbergR. (1993). White women, race matters: The social construction of whiteness. Minneapolis, Minn.: University of Minnesota Press.
33.
GansH. J. (1979). Deciding what's news: A study of CBS evening news, NBC nightly news, Newsweek and Time. New York: Pantheon.
34.
GartnerM. (1995). Give me old-time journalism: ‘Democracy-enhancing’ label runs counter to what media ought to be about, Quill, 83:66–69.
35.
GatesH. L.WestC. (1996). The future of race. New York: Alfred Knopf.
36.
GeertzC. (1973). The Interpretation of cultures: Selected essays. New York: Basic Books.
37.
GeertzC. (1983). Local knowledge: Further essays in interpretive anthropology. New York: Basic Books.
38.
GitlinT. (1980). The whole world is watching: Mass media in the making and unmaking of the New Left. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press.
39.
GoldmanI. (1990). Critical communication theory for undergraduate students. Journalism Educator45(1), 58–63.
40.
GrossP. R. (1998). Evidence-free forensics and enemies of objectivity. In Koertge, A house built on sand (pp. 99–118).
41.
GrossP. R.LevittN.LewisM. W. (1996). The flight from science and reason. New York: The New York Academy of Sciences.
42.
HaackS. (1996). Concern for truth: What it means, why it matters. In GrossLevittLewis, The flight from science and reason (pp. 57–63).
43.
HabermasJ. (U.S. ed., 1989; originally published, 1962). The structural transformation of the public sphere: An inquiry into a category of bourgeois society (T. Burger with F. Lawrence, Trans.). Cambridge, Mass.: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press.
44.
HallS. (1983). The problem of ideology — Marxism without guarantees. In MatthewsB., Marx: A hundred years on (pp. 57–85). London: Lawrence & Wishart.
45.
HallS. (1985). Signification, representation, ideology: Althusser and the post-structuralist debates. Critical Studies in Mass Communication2(2), 91–114.
46.
HallS. (1989). Ideology and communication theory. In DervinGrossbergO'KeefeWartella, Rethinking communication (Vol. 1): Paradigm issues.
47.
HallinD. C. (1994). We keep America on top of the world: Television journalism and the public sphere. London & New York: Routledge.
48.
HardingS. (1991). Whose science? Whose knowledge? Thinking from women's lives. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
49.
HardtH. (1992). Critical communication studies: Communication, history, and theory in America. London & New York: Routledge.
50.
HardtH. (1997). The quest for public journalism: A review essay. Journal of Communication47(3), 102–109.
51.
HarkerR.MaharC.WilkesC. (1990). An Introduction to the work of Pierre Bourdieu: The practice of theory. Houndhills, Hampshire: Macmillan.
52.
HarrisR. (1987). Reading Saussure: A critical commentary on the Cours de linguistic social. La Salle, Ill.: Open Court.
53.
HawkB. G. (1992). Africa's media image. New York: Praeger.
54.
HoareQ.SmithG. N. (1971). Selections from the prison notebooks of Antonio Gramsci. New York: Lawrence & Wishart.
55.
HolquistM. (1990). Dialogism: Bakhtin and his world. London & New York: Routledge.
56.
IgnatievN. (1995). How the Irish became white. New York: Routledge.
57.
JamesonF. (1991). Postmodernism, or, the cultural logic of late capitalism. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
58.
JohnsonR. (1993). The field of cultural production: Essays on art and literature. New York: Columbia University Press.
59.
KamufP. (1991). The Derrida reader. New York: Columbia University Press.
60.
KanissP. C. (1991). Making local news. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
61.
KanissP. C. (1995). The media and the mayor's race: The failure of urban political reporting. Bloomington & Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
62.
KellnerD. (1995). Media culture: Cultural studies, identity and politics between the modern and the postmodern. London & New York: Routledge.
63.
KochT. (1990). The news as myth: Fact and context in journalism. New York: Greenwood.
64.
KoertgeN. (1996). Feminist epistemology: Stalking an un-dead horse. In GrossLevittLewis, The flight from science and reason (pp. 413–419).
65.
KoertgeN. (1998). A house built on sand: Exposing postmodernist myths about science. New York: Oxford University Press.
66.
LarraineJ. (1979). The concept of ideology. Aldershot, Hampshire: Gregg Revivals.
67.
LaudanL. (1996). Beyond positivism and relativism: Theory, method, and evidence. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.
68.
LearsT. J. J. (1985). The concept of cultural hegemony: Problems and possibilities. American Historical Review90(3), 567–593.
69.
LefebvreH. (1971). Everyday life in the modern world (S. Rabinovitch, Trans.). New York: Harper.
70.
LeonardT. C. (1995). News for all: America's coming-of-age with the press. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.
71.
Lévi-StraussC. (U.S. Eds. of 2 vols., 1973, 1975; originally entitled Mythologiques and published as a four-volume work in Paris beginning in 1964). The raw and the cooked (Vol. 1); From honey to ashes (Vol. 2) (WeightmanJ. D., Trans.). New York: Harper & Row.
72.
LonginoH. (1990). Science as social knowledge: Values and objectivity in scientific inquiry. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
73.
LyotardJ. (1984). The postmodern condition: A report on knowledge (G. Bennington & B. Massumi, Trans.). Minneapolis, Minn.: University of Minnesota Press.
74.
MarxK. (1977). Capital (Vol. 1) (FowkesB.MandelE., Trans.; Intro.). New York: Vintage, Chap. 1 (esp. Section 4, “The fetishism of the commodity and its secret”).
75.
MelkoteS. R. (1991). Communication for development in the third world: Theory and practice. New Delhi, Newbury Park, Calif., & London: Sage.
76.
MenchuR. (1984). I, Rigoberta Menchu: An Indian woman in Guatemala (Burgos-DebrayE., Ed.; A. Wright, Trans.). London: Verso.
77.
MilibandR. (1969). The state in capitalist society. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
78.
MohammadiA. (1997). International communication and globalization: A critical introduction. London, Thousand Oaks, Calif., & New Delhi: Sage.
79.
MumbyD. K. (1993). Narrative and social control: Critical perspectives. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage.
80.
NandaM. (1998). The epistemic charity of the social constructivist critics of science and why the third world should refuse the offer. In Koertge, A house built on sand (pp. 286–311).
81.
NeroneJ. (1995). Last rights: Revisiting Four Theories of the Press. Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
82.
NordD. P. (1990). Newspapers and American nationhood, 1776–1826. Arlington, Va.: Gannett Foundation Freedom Center.
83.
OgnianovaE.EndersbyJ. (October 1996). Objectivity revisited: A spatial model of political ideology and mass communication. Journalism & Mass Communication Monographs, 159.
84.
OuthwaiteW. (1985). Hans-Georg Gadamer. In SkinnerQ., The return of grand theory in the human sciences (pp. 21–39). Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.
85.
ParisiP. (1992). Critical studies, the liberal arts, and journalism education. Journalism Educator46(4), 4–13.
86.
PoulantzasN. (1973). Political power and the social classes (T. O'Hagan, Trans.). London: NLB.
87.
RachlinA. (1988). News as hegemonic reality: American political culture and the framing of news accounts. New York: Praeger.
88.
RakowL. F. (1993). The curriculum is the future. Journal of Communication43(4), 154–162.
89.
de SaussureF. (1983). Course in general linguistics (BallyC.SechehayeA.; R. Harris, Trans.). London: Duckworth.
90.
SchillerD. (1981). Objectivity and the news: The public and the rise of commercial journalism. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
91.
SchudsonM. (1995). The power of news. Cambridge, Mass., & London: Harvard University Press.
92.
SeidmanS. (1989). Jürgen Habermas on society and politics: A reader. Boston: Beacon.
93.
ShoemakerP. J. (1993). Communication in crisis: Theory, curricula, and power. Journal of Communication43(4), 146–153.
94.
ShoemakerP. J.ReeseS. D. (1996). Mediating the message: Theories of influences on mass media content (2nd ed.). White Plains, N.Y.: Longman.
95.
SokalS.BricmontJ. (1998). Fashionable nonsense: Postmodern intellectuals' abuse of science. New York: St. Martin's.
96.
StokerK. (1995). Existential objectivity: Freeing journalists to be ethical. Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 10(1), 5–23.
97.
SwansonD. L. (1993). Fragmentation, the field, and the future. Journal of Communication43(4), 163–172.
98.
ThibaultP. J. (1997). Re-reading Saussure: The dynamics of signs in social life. New York: Routledge.
99.
ThompsonJ. B. (1984). Studies in the theory of ideology. Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press.
100.
TuchmanG. (1978). Making news: A study in the construction of reality. New York: Free Press.
101.
TurnerG. (1990). British cultural studies: An introduction (1st ed.). New York & London: Routledge.
102.
WilliamsR. (1980). Problems in materialism and culture. London: Verso.
103.
WinterJ. (1986). Course does a critical study of press in capitalist society. Journalism Educator41(1), 14–18.
104.
van ZoonenL. (1994). Feminist media studies. London: Sage.