Alton, ‘What do People Think of Science?’, New Scientist, 21 February 1985.
2.
AppaduraiA., ed, The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, Cambridge University Press, 1986.
3.
BergerP., The Homeless Mind, Penguin, 1973.
4.
BermanM., All that is Solid Melts into Air: The Experience of Modernity. London, Verso, 1983.
5.
BernsteinR., Habermas and Modernity, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1985.
6.
BootW., ‘NASA and the Spellbound Press’, Columbia Journalism Review, July/August 1986, 23–29.
7.
BorgmannA., Technology and the Character of Contemporary Life, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1984.
8.
CollinsH.M., ‘Certainly and the Public Understanding of Science; Social Studies of Science17 (1987), 689–713.
9.
DicksonD., ‘From Strangelove to Star Wars’, Metascience4 (1986), 35–45.
10.
DicksonD., The New Politics of Science. New York, Pluto Press, 1985.
11.
DouglasM.IsherwoodB., The World of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption, New York, Basic Books, 1978.
12.
DunwoodyS., ‘Selected Bibliography: Research on Mass Media Science Communication’ in Scientists and Journalists: Reporting Science as News, eds FriedmanS.M., New York, Free Press, 1986.
13.
EckersleyR.Australian Attitudes to Science and Technology and the Future: A Report for the Commission for the Future, Melbourne, 1987.
14.
EllulJ., The New Demons, London, Mowbray, 1973. Ewan, S, Captains of Consciousness: Advertising and the Social Roots of the Consumer Culture, New York, McGraw Hill, 1982.
15.
EwanS., Channels of Desire: Mass Images and the Shaping of American Consciousness, New York, McGraw Hill, 1982.
16.
FiskeI.HartleyJ., Reading Television, New York, Methuen, 1978.
17.
FlinkJ., Car Culture, Cambridge, MIT Press, 1975.
18.
FriedmanS.M., eds, Scientists and Journalists: Reporting Science as News. New York, Free Press, 1986.
19.
GalganC., The Logic of Modernity, New York, New York University Press, 1982.
20.
ClassF.‘Sign of the Times: The Computer as Character in Tron, War Games and Superman III’, Film Quarterly, Winter 1984–85, 16–27.
21.
GoodellR., ‘The Role of the Mass Media in Scientific Controversy’, in Scientific Controversies, eds EngelhardtH.T.CaplanA., Cambridge University Press, 1987. Goodfield, J, Reflections on Science and the Media, Washington, AAAS, 1981.
22.
HaugW.F., Critique of Commodity Aesthetics: Appearance, Sexuality and Advertising in Capitalist Society, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1986.
23.
HellerA., ‘Marx and Modernity’, Thesis Eleven8 (1984), 44–58.
24.
HorneD., The Public Culture: The Triumph of Industrialism. Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1986.
25.
JamesonF., ‘Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism’, New Left Review146 (1985). 53–92.
26.
JonesG.ConnellI.MeadowsJ.The Presentation of Science by the Media, Leicester, University of Leicester, Primary Communications Research Centre, 1971.
27.
La FolletteM.C., ‘Science on Television: Influences and Strategies’, Daedalus, Fall 1982, 183–97.
28.
LaneE., ‘Films Fail Physics’, Age, 6 April 1987. Lasch, C, The Culture of Narcissism, London, Abacus, 1980.
29.
LaschC., The Minimal Self, London, Pan Books, 1985.
30.
LearsT.J.FoxR.W., eds, The Culture of Consumption, New York. Random House, 1983.
31.
LeissW.KlineS.JhallyS., Social Communication in Advertising. Toronto &. New York, Methuen, 1986.
32.
MackenD., ‘Scientists in Search of the Elusive Formula for Public Recognition’, Age, 27 July 1985.
33.
MarchandR., Advertising and the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity 1920–1940, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1986.
34.
MazurA., ‘Media Coverage and Public Opinion on Scientific Controversies’, Journal of Communication31, 2 (September 1981) 106–115.
35.
MillsS.C.WilliamsR., Public Acceptance of New Technologies: An International Review, London, Croom Helm, 1986.
36.
MorrisB., Interview with Robin Williams onThe Uncertainly Principle, ABC TV, 1987.
37.
MurdochA., ‘Science Exposed’, Age Green Guide, 4 December 1986, 1.
38.
NelkinD., Selling Science: How the Press covers Science and Technology. San Francisco, W H Freeman, 1987.
39.
NewcombH.M.HirschP.M., ‘ Television as a Cultural Forum: Implications for Research’ in Interpreting Television: Current Research Perspectives, eds RowlandW.D.JrWalkinsB., London, Sage, 1983.
40.
OECD, Reviews of National Science and Technology Policy: Australia, Paris, OECD, 1986.
41.
ReesL., Science in Bondage, Canberra, Australian Academy of Science, 1987.
42.
Royal Society, The Public Understanding of Science, London, Royal Society, 1985.
43.
SchibeciR., ‘Students, Science and the Media in Australia’Media Information Australia39 (February 1986), 25–28.
44.
SchibeciR., ‘Science and Australian Newspapers: Selected Studies’. Riverina Library Review5, 4 (November, 1988), 311–14.
45.
SitverstoneR., The Message of Television: Myth and Narrative in Contemporary Culture, London, Heinemann, 1981.
46.
SilverstoneR., Framing Science: The Making of a BBC Documentary, London, BF1 Books, 1985.
47.
SmithM., ‘Selling the Moon: The US Manned Space Program and the triumph of Commodity Scientism’, in The Culture of Consumption, ed FoxR.W.LearsT.J., New York, Random House, 1983.
48.
TullochJ., ‘Dr Who: Similarity and Difference’, Australian Journal of Screen Theory11, 12 (1982), 8–27.
49.
TullochJ.AlvaradoM., Doctor Who: The Unfolding Text. London, Macmillan, 1983.
50.
WallerG., ‘Flow, Genre and the Television Text’, Journal of Popular Film and Television16, 1 (Spring 1988), 6–11.
51.
WebbJ., ‘New Science Magazines and the Public Communication of Knowledge’, Media Information Australia22 (November 1981).
52.
WhinsterS.LashS., eds, Max Weber, Rationality and Modernity. London, Allen & Unwin, 1987.
53.
WilliamsR., Television: Technology and Cultural Form, London, 1974.
54.
WindschuttleK., The Media, Harmondswonh, Penguin, 1984.
55.
WinnerL.Autonomous Technology. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press, 1977.
56.
WoodruffB., ‘The Popularisation of Science: The Role of the Science Journalist in the Science Communication Process’, Australian Journalism Review8, 1–2 (January/December 1986), 29–32.