
Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
Updating and revising his classic text of media criticism, Bagdikian (dean emeritus, Graduate School of Journalism, U. of California at Berkeley) continue to expose how the concentration of U.S. media into fewer and fewer hands, now just a handful of powerful corporations, has narrowed the political discourse of the country and served as a crucial instrument in shifting the political culture towards what just a few decades ago would have been considered the extreme right. He describes how this concentration has happened with the aid of government and explores its pernicious effects on the marketplace of ideas. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
In the two decades since the initial publication of The Media Monopoly, media ownership worldwide has become concentrated in increasingly fewer and larger corporations. The number of media conglomerates has dwindled from 50 in 1983 to just five today. Bagdikian (journalism, dean emeritus, Berkeley) thus set out to completely revise his best-known work and has written seven new chapters. The Internet, relegated to the preface in the sixth edition (2000), now gets a whole chapter, although the author's grasp of some key concepts is a bit shaky (Napster, he explains, "provided a large collection" of music). Unfortunately, the five chapters retained from earlier editions still rely on decades-old research, and there have been few substantive changes to the text. This lack of careful revision has resulted in some glaring anachronisms For instance, Bagdikian writes that Time magazine has been a steady supporter of the policies of Henry Kissinger. Despite its flaws, this new edition offers a thorough and in some respects up-to-date examination of a crucial topic. For lack of an alternative, it is recommended for public libraries.-Susan M. Colowick, Timberland Regional Lib., Tumwater, WA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsPulitzer Prize winning journalist Ben H. Bagdikian is dean emeritus of the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley.