
Community Media: International
Perspectives
by Linda K. Fuller
Book Description
Drawing on both theoretical and practical case studies, Community
Media moves from developing attempts at local media to case studies
and on to cyber-examples. Alphabetically, its more than two dozen
cases include reports on the Asian Pacific region, Australia, Bangladesh,
Belgium, Brazil, Ghana, India, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Latin America,
Lebanon, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, the United Kingdom,
the United States, as well as a number of other perspectives and (virtual)
visions. The contributors, all distinguished international communications
scholars, present a range of perspectives on the ever-burgeoning area
of grassroots, local media by the people, for the people, their research
representing participant observation, hands-on community involvement,
serving on international boards of directors, content analysis, and
ethical inquiries. It will appeal to a range of academic disciplines,
community media groups, and the thousands of people who work in their
local cable television centers to provide an alternative voice to
mainstream media.
About the Author
Linda K. Fuller is Professor in the Communications
Department of Worcester (MA) State College . She is the author/ (co)editor
of more than 20 books and over 250 professional publications and conference
reports, including The Cosby Show: Audiences, Impact, Implications
(1992); Community Television in the U.S.: A Sourcebook on Public,
Educational, and Governmental Access (1994); Media-Mediated Relationships
(1996); Dictionary of Quotations in Communications (1997); Women and
AIDS: Negotiating Safer Practices, Care, and Representation (1998);
Media-Mediated AIDS (2003), National Days/National Ways (2004), and
Sport, Rhetoric, and Gender: Historical Perspectives and Media Representations
(Palgrave, 2005). The recipient of Fulbright awards to Singapore (1996)
and Senegal (2002), Fuller’s next books deals with the topics
of media violence, African Women and HIV/AIDS, and sportscasting.
She has been appointed a Visiting Senior Fellow at Northeastern University
since 2003, affiliated with the Institute for Critical Gender and
Ethnic Studies Research.