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001 vtls002269260
003 MY-SjTCS
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008 110218s1996 enk 001 eng
020 _a0198711336
039 9 _a201909201315
_bummi
_c201102181306
_dVLOAD
_y200407271932
_zVLOAD
082 0 4 _a072.09048
_bTUN
100 1 _aTunstall, Jeremy.
_9101813
245 1 0 _aNewspaper power :
_bthe new national press in Britain /
_cJeremy Tunstall
260 _aOxford :
_bClarendon Press ;
_aNew York :
_bOxford University Press,
_c1996
300 _axi, 441 p. ;
_c23 cm.
505 0 _aList of Figures. - List of Tables. - Introduction. - I. National Competition. 1. National Tabloids and Broadsheets. 2. Murdoch's Wapping Power Shift. 3. From the Golden 1960s to 1990s Super-competition. 4. Local Press Meltdown : Freesheet and Tabloid Triumph. - II. Owners, Managers, And Editors. 5. From Press Lords to Mogulas and Macho Managers. 6. Sovereign Editors and Editor-Managers. 7. Enterpreneurial Editors. 8. From Gentlemen of the Press to Journos. - III. Journalism, Stories, And Readers. 9. Page Power. 10. Star Power. 11. Television and the Press. 12. The Big Story. 13. Readers and Viewers. - IV. Newspapers And Politics. 14. Stronger Media Versus Government. 15. A Partisan and Right-skewed Press. 16. Lobby Journalists, Politicians, and Prime Ministers. 17. Columnists and Wider Political Journalism. 18. Newspapers and Crisis Definition. 19. Hacking down the Monarchy. 20. Shrinking Foreign News. 21. Financial News Take-over. - V. Prime Minister, Press, And Media Policy. 22. Press Monopoly (Press Preservation) Policy. 23. Token Self-regulation. 24. Prime Minister, Press, and Broadcasting Policy. VI. Conclusions. 25. Powerful Newspapers. - Bibliography. - Index.
650 0 _aEnglish newspapers
_zGreat Britain
_xHistory.
_9204093
650 0 _aGovernment and the press
_zGreat Britain.
_9204094
650 0 _aPress and politics
_zGreat Britain.
_910597
920 _aMCS(USM) : 200911, 200912, 200913
999 _c22741
_d22741