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Today, a new generation of historians are considering the rich and complicated place of media within cultural, political, and economic history. Works such as Elena Razlogova’s The Listener’s Voice (on radio), Fred Turner’s The Democratic Surround (on avant-garde multimedia), and Nicole Hemmer’s forthcoming Messengers of the Right (on conservative media) promise to tell us much about the manifold ways that technologies of communication intersect with the politics of art, class, gender, race, and other dimensions of the human experience.
#Raymond Williams, ''Television: Technology and Cultural Form'' (Routledge Classics, 1974)#Elizabeth Eisenstein, ''The Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and Cultural Transformations in Early Modern Europe'' (Cambridge University Press, 1979)#Paul Edwards, ''The Closed World: Computers and the Politics of Discourse in Cold War America'' (The MIT Press, 1996)#Lynn Spigel, ''Make Room for TV: Television and the Family Ideal in Postwar America'' (University of Chicago Press, 1992)#Alain Corbin, ''Village Bells: Sound and Meaning in the Nineteenth Century French Countryside'' (Columbia University Press, 1998)#Susan J. Douglas, ''Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination'' (University of Minnesota Press, 1999)#Paul Starr, ''The Creation of the Media: Political Origins of Modern'' Communication (Basic Books, 2004)#Brian Larkin, ''Signal and Noise: Media, Infrastructure, and Urban Culture in Nigeria'' (Duke University Press, 2008)#Elena Razlogova, ''The Listener's Voice: Early Radio and the American Public'' (University of Penn Press, 2011)#Fred Turner, ''The Democratic Surround: Multimedia and American Liberalism from World War II to the Psychedelic Sixties'' (University of Chicago Press, 2013)
{{Contributors}} [[Category:Booklists]]