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VIZBIB INDEX Compiled by Dennis Dunleavy Southern Oregon University 541.552.8433 Email: ddunleavy@mac.com
Broadcasting, Television & Film |
Broadcasting, Television & Film Cable television news viewed as most credible. Mineabere Ibelema and Larry Powell, Newspaper Research Journal, Volume 22, Number 1, 2001, pages 80-93. Defining audio/video redundancy from a limited-capacity information processing perspective. A. Lang, Communication Research, 1995, pages 86-115. Do televised debates affect image perception more than issue knowledge? A study of the first 1992 presidential debate. Jian-Hua Zhu, J. Ronald Milavsky and Rahul Biswas, Human Communication Research, March 1994, pages 302-33. Effects of censorship disclaimers in Persian Gulf War television news on negative thought elaboration. John Newhagen, Communication Research, April 1994, pages 232-248. Effects of interpretations of televised alcohol portrayals on children's alcohol beliefs. Erica Weintraub Austin and Heidi Kay Meili, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, Fall 1994, pages 417-435. For a phenomenology of radio and television, Paddy Scannell, Journal of Communication, Summer 1995, pages 4-19. Four decades of families on television: a demographic profile, 1950-1989. Thomas Skill and James D. Robinson, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, Fall 1994, pages 449-464. Framing effects of television news coverage of social protest. Douglas M. McLeod and Benjamin H. Detenber, Journal of Communication, Summer 1999, pages 3-23. Hollywood glamour, What glamorous was, What glamour is, and All that glitters.American Photo, Special Section, May/June 1995, pages 54-99. How low can TV news go? Steve Johnson, Columbia Journalism Review, July/August, 1997, pages 24-29. Interpreting visual versus audio messages in television news. Ann N. Crigler, Marion Just, and W. Russell Neuman, Journal of Communication, Autumn 1994, pages 132-149. Interpreting Visual Versus Audio Messages in Television News. Ann N. Crigler, Marion Just, and W. Russell Neuman, Journal of Communication, 44(2) Autumn 1994, pages 132-149. Is Hollywood America? The transnationalization of the American film industry. Frederick Wasser, Critical Studies in Mass Communication, December 1995, pages 423-437. Local TV news lacks substance. Mark Fitzerald, Editor & Publisher, May 24, 1997, pages 8-9. Mediating Hillary Rodham Clinton: Television news practices and image-making in postmodern age. Shawn J. Parry-Giles, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Volume 17, Number 2, June 2000, pages 205-226. New contexts for documentary production in Britain. Richard Kilborn, Media, Culture & Society, 18, pages 141-150. News lite. James McCartney, American Journalism Review, June, 1997, pages 19-25. Presence and television: the role of screen size. Matthew Lombard, Robert D. Reich, Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Theresa Bolmarcich Ditton, Human Communication Research, January 2000, pages 75-98. Prime-time players and powerful prose: The role of women in the 1997-1998 television season. Martha M. Lauzen, David M. Dozier, and Manda V. Hicks, Mass Communication and Society, Volume 4, Number 1, 2001, pages 39-60. Priming Effects of Television News Bumpers and Teasers on Attention andMemory. Joan Schleuder, Alice White, and Glen Cameron, Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, Fall 1993, pages 437-452. Rock 'em, shock 'em. Mike Wilson, Quill, March 1994, pages 33-35. Rodney King, Reginald Denny, and TV news: cultural (re-)construction of racism. Jill Dianne Swenson, Journal of Communication Inquiry, Spring 1995, pages 75-88. Smoking guns: ABC, Philip Morris and the infamous apology. Steve Weinberg, Columbia Journalism Review, November/December 1995, pages 29-37. Television's portrayal of the environment: 1991-1995. James Shanahan and Katherine McComas, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Spring 1997, pages 147-59. The copyright implications of using video in the classroom. Lance Speere and Paul Parsons, Journalism Educator, 50 (3) Winter 1995, pages 11-20. The impact of television, print, and audio on children's recall of the news. Juliette H. Walma Van Der Molen and Tom H. A. Van Der Voort, Human Communication Research, January 2000, pages 3-26. The Murrow boys--broadcasting for the mind's eye. Stanley Cloud & Lynne Olson. Defining Moments in Journalism, Media Studies Journal, Spring 1997, pages 1-5. The world outside: local TV news treatment of imported news. Raymond Carroll and C.A. Tuggle, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Spring 1997, pages 123-33. Toward a Syntax of Motion. C.W. Kaha, Critical Studies in Mass Communication, December 1993, pages 339-348. VNRs and air checks: a content analysis of the use of video news releases in television newscasts. Glen Cameron and David Blount, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Winter 1996, 73(3): 890-904. What do children value in entertainment programs? A cross-cultural investigation. Patti M. Valkenburg and Sabine C. Janssen, Journal of Communication, 49 (3) Spring 1999, pages 3-21. You news. Andie Tucher, Columbia Journalism Review, May/June, 1997, pages. 26-31. The fall guy. By Anthony Lane, The New Yorker, October 23, 1995, pages 66-72. Working girl. Sarah Kerr, The New York Review, February 20, 1997, pages 27-29. What a set-up! Barbara Robertson, Computer Graphics World, July 1995, pages 36-40.
Emerging Technologies Artists' books and the cultural status of the book. Johanna Drucker, Journal of Communication, Winter 1994, pages 12-42. Cyberspace has a V.I.P. lounge, too. The talk of the town, New Yorker, April 25, 1994, pages 39-40. Digital video use generates interest, questions. Steve Shipside, IFRAGazette, October 12, 2000, http://www.ifra.com/ifrav7.nsf/indexgazette Does web advertising work? Memory for print vs. online media. S. Shyam, Sunetra Narayan, Rafael Obregoon, and Charu Uppal, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Winter, 1998, pp. 822-35. Electronic photo archiving. Helen Cohen Smith, Editor & Publisher, March 5, 1994, pages 18P-19P, 23P Exploring the Interactive Future. Todd Oppenheimer, Columbia Journalism Review. November-December 1993, pages 34-37. Filmless wonders. Daniel Grotta and Sally Wiener Grotta, Macworld, September 1995, pages 98-105. Follow that content. David M. Cole, Presstime, October 2000, pages 38-41. Grab that image. The MIT Technology Review, November/December, 2000, page 24, Available: http://www.techreview.com/articles/nov00/prototype.htm#10 How digital imaging changes the work of photojournalists. John Russial, Newspaper Research Journal, Spring 2000, pages 67-83. In a golden age of discovery, faraway worlds beckon. John Noble Wilford, The New York Times, February 9, 1997, pages A1, 14-15. Multimedia effects on processing and perception of online news: a study of picture, audio, and video downloads. S. Shyam Sundar, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Autumn 2000, pages 480-499. Perceptions of Internet information credibility. Andrew J. Flanagin and Miriam J. Metzer, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Autumn 2000, pages 515-540. Plunkett + Kuhr: News from the future. Sam McMillan, Communication Arts,May/June 1995. Reality check: the future of holography. David Pescovitz, Wired, July 1995, page 60. Rethinking the news story for the internet: Hyperstory prototypes and a model of the user. Eric S. Fredin, Journalism and Mass Communication Monographs, September 1997. Rethinking virtual reality: Simulations and the deconstruction of the image. David Gunkel, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Volume 17, Number 1, March 2000, pages 45-62. Strangers in a strange land: interaction management on internet relay chat. E. Sean Rintel and Jeffery Pittam, Human Communication Research, June 1997, pages 507-534. Techs vs. lits. Ron Javers, American Journalism Review, July/August 1995, pages 16-17. The future of narrative discourse: Internet constructs of literacy and identity. Work and Days, Volumes 17 and 18, 1999-2000. The Internet as Mass Medium, The Art Site on the World Wide Web, and Making Friends in Cyberspace. The net. Journal of Communication, Winter 1996. The new media landscape. Nicholas Negroponte, Multimedia Today, July-September 1995, pages 80-85. Thinking, learning and the written word. Naomi S. Baron. Visible Language, Winter 1997, pages. 6-38. Through a glass darkly: what do people learn in videoconferences. John Storck and Lee Sproull, Human Communication Research, December 1995, pages 197-219. TV infomercials for newspapers. Tom Milligan and Donald Bender, Editor & Publisher, February 12, 1994, pages 20TC-21TC.
Ethics, Education & Law Actions of early journalists often unethical, even illegal. Fred Fedler. Journal of Mass Media Ethics, Volume 12, Number 3, pages 160-170. An experimental investigation of the influence of photographs on college student perceptions of Africans. Osabuohien P. Amienyi and Gilbert T. Abraham, Southwestern, Mass Communication Journal, Vol. 11, No. 1, 1995, pages 67-80. Color me trademark: Shapes, sounds and a smell also qualify, sometimes. Michael Finn, Editor & Publisher, December 4, 1993, pages 4T-8T. Cyberspace in the curricula: new legal and ethical issues. Steven Smethers. Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, Winter 1998, pages 80-84. Di Spy photos raise specter of press regulation. Robert O'Connor, Editor & Publisher, December 18, 1993, pages 14-15; 47. Ethical sensitivity in viewer evaluations of a TV news investigative report. Rebecca Ann Lind, Human Communication Research, June 1997, pages 535-561. Journalists, framing, and discourse about race relations. David Domke. Journalism and Mass Communication Monographs, December, 1997, pages 1-55. Licensing Photographers. Editor & Publisher, January 29, 1994, editorial, page 6. Manufacturing the norm: the origin and development of candid wedding photography. Charles Lewis. Journal of Visual Literacy, Spring 1998, pages 15-46, photographs. Media ethics and the technological society. Clifford Christians, guest editor, Journal of Mass Media Ethics Special Issue: New Media Technologies, Volume 13, Number 2, pages 67-70. New technology effects inventory: forty leading ethical issues. Thomas W.Cooper, Journal of Mass Media Ethics, Volume 13, Number 2, pages 71-92. News associations file brief in N. H. newspaper's appeal. Debra Gersh Hernandez, Editor & Publisher, April 9, 1994, page 22. Other people's nightmares. Michael Lesy. Aperture, Fall 1997, pages 14-23. Photo finished? Dorothy Giobbe, Editor & Publishers, October 5, 1996, pages 8-9. Photo realism. Mark Toner, Presstime, October, 1997, pages 38-43. Police and press fight over photos, Editor & Publisher, May 15, 1999, page 10. Private moment or PR photo op? Kelvin Childs, Editor & Publisher, Jan. 17, 1998, page 21. Supply photos. Quill, March 1994, page 5. Teaching critical analytical methods in the digital typography classroom. Michael Gibson. Visible Language 31, pages 301-324, illustrations. The future of computers and learning. Alfred Bork, T.H.E. Journal, June 1997, pages 69-77. The questionable uses of 19th century photographs in visual research: Wisconsin Death Trip as case study. C. Zoe Smith. Journal of Visual Literacy, Spring 1998, pages 47-60. The vulnerable image: categories of photos as predictor of digital manipulation. Shiela Reaves, Journalism Quarterly , Autumn 1995, pages 7-6-715. Trademarks 101: The basics. Laurence Savell, Editor & Publisher, December 4, 1993, pages 23T-26T. Using a digital camera to teach physically challenged students; creative solutions permit talents to flourish. Brigit L. Wassmuth. Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, Winter 1998, pages 80-84. Virtually transcendent: cyberculture and the body. David J. Gunkel, Journal of Mass Media Ethics Special Issue: New Media Technologies, Volume 13, Number 2, pages 111-123. Why are cameras still banned in federal courts? Tony Mauro, Quill, March 1994, pages 12-13.
Graphic Design, Cartoons & Art Biased layouts. Quill, March 1994, page 8. Color predictions. Anne Telford, Communication Arts, January/February 1994, page 90. Comic creator with a star-spangled life. David Astor, Editor & Publisher, December 11, 1993, pages 40-41. Daily design. Peter Hall, Upper and lower case, Vol. 20, No. 3, pages12-17. Designed to tell: editors at five dailies explain how they strive to meld form and function to win readers. Presstime, April 1999, pages 46-51. Digital culture and the practices of art and art history, a range of critical perspectives. Kathleen Cohen, James Elkins, Marilyn Aronberg Lavin, Nancy Macko, Gary Schwartz, Susan L. Siegfried, and Barbara Maria Stafford. Art Bulletin, June 1997, pages. 187-216. Dis[appearances]: representational strategies and operational needs in codexpace and screenspace. Katie Salen and Sharyn O'Mara. Visible Language 31.3, pages 260-285, illustrations. Drawing Pens and Politics: Mightier Than the Sorehead. The Nation, January 17, 1994, pages 45-53. Editorial cartoon branded as racist. Richard P. Cunningham, Quill, April 1994, pages 12-13. Editorial cartoonists--an endangered species? Doug Marlette, Media Studies Journal, Spring 1997, pp. 113-130. Educating digiterati. Barbara Maria Stafford, Art Bulletin, June 1997, pages 214-216. From story writing to art that is biting. David Astor, Editor & Publisher, December. 4, 1993, pages 34-35. Grounding the teaching of design in creativity. Renita Coleman and Jan Colbert, Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, Volume 56, Number 2, Summer 2001, pages 4-24. Herblock speaks at cartoon convention. David Astor, Editor & Publisher, August 5, 1995, page 26. History and its Images: Art and the Interpretation of the Past. Francis Haskell. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993. Infographics: Oh! Those bloody graphics, Indonesian newspaper learns the values of journalism and ethics with its graphics. Jeff Goertzen, Design Journal, Summer 2001, pages 47-51. Interactive design: a profession in search of professional education. Janet H. Murray, The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 23, 1999, page. B4. Looking at what's not there--yet. Douglas Fitch, Metropolis, November 1995, pages 50-53. Major Southern California dailies drop "Doonesbury." Editor & Publisher, November 13, 1993, page 36. Making the leap: A graphic designer's guide to starting--and surviving--the transition to new media. James Larkin, Adobe Magazine, May/June 1995. Mexican university shuts U.S. professor's exhibit. Rhona Statland de Lopez, Chronicle of Higher Education, May 7, 1999. Nero fiddles while Rome Burns: One designer's slant on the fifth AIGA national conference. D.K. Holland, Communication Arts, January/February 1994, pages 14-18. Newspaper apologizes. M.L. Stein, Editor & Publisher, March 26, 1994, pages 16-17 (illustration). On the effectiveness of highlighting ads in telephone directories by color. Dirk Wendt, Wiebke Groggel and Georg Gutschmidt. Visible Language 31.3, pages 326-337, illustrations. Political and social cartoons from Israel. David Astor, Editor & Publisher, January 9, 1994, page 30. Readers consume what they see. Monica Moses, Design, Spring 2000, pages 39-41. The century in political cartoons. Columbia Journalism Review, May/June 1999, pages 54-57. The colourmen. Robin Crane Films, London, available from Winsor & Newton through college bookstores, 1989, 30-minute video. The Effectiveness of Locator Maps in Increasing Reader Understanding of the Geography of Foreign News. Jeffrey L. Griffin and Robert L. Stevenson, Journalism Quarterly, Winter 1994, pages 937-946. The human factor: how to draw bodies and faces more convincingly. J. Scott Campbell, Aldus Magazine, May/June 1994, pages 53-55 (illustrations). 19 pictures. Editors, Aldus Magazine, May/June 1994, pages 36-50 (illustrations). There is such a thing as society. Andrew Howard, Eye, Number 13, Volume 4, 1994. This young creator is a "big yuk" hater. David Astor, Editor & Publisher, December 18, 1993, pages 42-43. Tom Tomorrow's Modern World. Dan Perkins, Media Studies Journal , Spring 1995, pages 42-46. Update on infographics in American newspapers. Sandra Utt and Steve Pasternak, Newspaper Research Journal, Spring 2000, pages 55-66. Visual Crosstabs: A Technique for Enriching Information Graphics. James. W. Tankard,Jr., Mass Comm Review, v. 21: 1&2, 1994, pages 49-66. Visual mapping and cultural authority: design changes in U.S. newspapers, 1920-1940. John Nerone and Kevin G. Barnhurst, Journal of Communication, Spring 1995, pages 9-43. Washi: Japan's handmade paper and its myriad uses" Gerd Lester, Arts of Asia, January/February 1995, pages 74-84. Web page design and graphic use of three U.S. newspapers. Xigen Li, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Volume 75, Number 2, 1998, pages 353-365. Wilkinson's sex-abuse cartoon causes flap for Catholic papers. Mark Fitzgerald, Editor & Publisher, January. 8,1994, page 32. WTO Seattle 1999. Cole Porter and David Miller, Design, Spring 2000, pages 23-34. Young Readers and the Newspaper: Information Recall and Perceived Enjoyment, Readability, and Attractiveness. Wayne Wanta and Dandan Gao, Journalism Quarterly, Winter 1994, pages 926-936.
Photojournalism, Documentary & Photography A return to "Mr. Gates": Photography and Objectivity, Kimberly Bissell, Newspaper Research Journal, Summer 2000, pages 81-93. Altered photo faux pas. Stacy Jones, Editor & Publisher, June 14, 1997, p. 11. American Photography 1890-1965; From the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Peter Galassi. New York: MOMA, 1995. An ethnographic surrealist film: Luis Bu-uel's Land Without Bread. Jeffrey Ruoff, Visual Anthropology Review, Spring-Summer 1998, pages. 45-57. AP journalists are under fire. Editor & Publisher, April 2, 1994, page 28. AP photographer killed in S. Africa. Editor & Publisher, January 29, 1994, page 28. Better cops, fewer robbers. Story by James Lardner, Photographs by Mary Ellen Mark. The New York Times Magazine, February 9, 1997, cover, pages 44-54, 62. Central Park. Bruce Davidson. New York: Aperture, 1995. Cien anos de fotografia Argentina en el Queens College. Fotomundo. February 1995, pages 32-34. Columnists can be young again in pix. David Astor, Editor & Publisher, February 5, 1994, pages 30-31. Constructing Palestinians: Visual Rhetoric and Work Organization in a News Magazine Documentary. Dick Doughty. , pages 4-20; The Millstone of Popular Culture: Competing With the Commercial Mass Production of Cultural Imagery, Michael Griffin, pages 21-27; Reading Advertisements: Race vs. Ethnicity? Philip Kretsedemas, pages 40-7; The Joy of Victory, the Agony of Defeat: Stereotypes in Newspaper Sports; Feature Photographs, Dianne Hagaman, pages 48-66. Visual Anthropology, Fall 1993. Critical Focus: Photography in the International Image Community. A.D. Coleman. Munich: Nazraeli Press, 1995. Erin's looking for Leg-Rub Steve. Fly's looking for CD's to steal. Star's looking for Jaya. And it's starting to get cold. Words by Ian Fisher, Photographs by Edward Keating. The New York Times Magazine, December 8, 1996, pages 72-77. Follow-Up: Phony Photos. Ken Davidoff, Columbia Journalism Review, November-December 1993, page 20. Gilles Mora & John T. Hill. Walker Evans: The Hungry Eye. New York: Harry M. Abrams, 1993. Harlotry project. Si Liberman. Editor & Publisher, April 12, 1997, pages 14-15. Horace Bristol: An Appreciation. Bill Kouwenhoven. photo metro, Volume16, Issue 146, pages 16-18. International Center of Photography: Twenty Years 1974-1994. ICP, 1995.The lens of the beholder: 60 years of photographing the Soviet empire. Michael Specter, The New York Times , July 14, 1995, page A3. International Center of Photography: Twenty Years 1974-1994. ICP, 1995. Journalists attacked in South Africa. Editor & Publisher, April 9, 1994, page 26. Judith Keller. Walker Evans: The Getty Museum Collection. Malibu: The J.Paul Getty Museum, 1995. Letter from: New York, No. 80. A. D. Coleman, photo metro, Volume 16, Issue 146, pages 16-18. Magnum at 50, Neil Hickey, Columbia Journalism Review, July/August 2000, page 43. Massive Fire Coverage in California. M.L. Stein, Editor & Publisher, November 20, 1993, pages 11-13. New York Dogs, Photographs. Andrea Mohin, Forward by Vicki Hearne. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1997. New York to Hollywood: The Photography of Karl Struss. Barbara McCandless, Bonnie Yochelson & Richard Koszarski. Ft. Worth: Amon Carter Museum, & Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1995. News Agressivo. Jack Epstein, Columbia Journalism Review, November-December, 1993. Newspaper photographs and the 1996 Presidential elections. Paul Waldman and James Devitt, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Volume 75, Number 2, 1998, pages 302-311. Photo editors and 'advocate' keep on shooting. Robert Salgado, Editor & Publisher, March 5, 1994, page 22. Photo unfair. Quill, April 1994, page 4. Photographer arrested in N.J. Editor & Publisher, April 2, 1994, page 33. Photographer beaten. M.L. Stein, Editor & Publisher, April 5, 1997, page 20. Photographs from South Africa. Rosalind Solomon, UTNE Reader, March-April 1995, pages 105-109. Photographs from South Africa. Rosalind Solomon. UTNE Reader, March-April 1995, pages 105-109. Photojournalism in the Digital Age. Michael Miley, Macweek, Oct. 7, 1996, p 18-21. Photojournalists--visionaries who have changed our vision. Jane M. Rosett, Media Studies Journal, Spring 1997, pages. 39-57. Pictures from Hell: James Nachtwey's photojournalism, John Kifner, Columbia Journalism Review, July/August 2000, pages 44-45. Picturing Paradise: Colonial Photography of Samoa, 1875 to 1925. Alison Devine Nordstrom, et. al., Daytona Beach: Southeast Museum of Photography, 1995. Picturing the Landscape. European Journal of Comm, 10 (1), 1995. Poetics of space: a critical photographic anthology. Edited by Steve Yates. University of New Mexico Press, 1995. Police pictures: the photograph as evidence. Alicia Miller, photo metro, Volume 16, Issue 146, pages 44-45. Pols Want to Ban Photos of Victims. Editor & Publisher. March 29,1997, page 7. Portraits. Gerard Malanga. Arshile: A Magazine of the Arts, No. 2, 1993, pages 65-78. Portraits.Gerard Malanga. Arshile: A Magazine of the Arts, Number 2, 1993, pages 65-78. Re-picturing photography: A language in the making. Aphrodite Desiree Navab. Journal of Aesthetic Education, Volume 35, Number 1, Spring 2001, pages 69-84. Roll on Columbia. Michael Majdic and Denise Matthews. Video. 2000. http://libweb.uoregon.edu:80/imc/wguthrie/index.html Russian News Photographer Killed. Associated Press, Editor & Publisher, November 20, 1993, page 13. Scholarly Practice-Ethnographic Film and Anthropology,vVisual Anthropology 7 (1995): 233-248. See No Evil? Differing Responses to an Awful Image. Jim Upshaw and John Russial, Columbia Journalism Review, January-February 1994, pages. 9-11. Stories in pictures. Presstime, December 1996, pages 30-31. Strong hearts, Native American visions and voices. Aperture. Summer 1995.William Clift. A conversation with Kurt Markus. American Way, May 1, 1995, pages 80-85, 106, 108, 110 & 113. Strong hearts, Native American visions and voices. Aperture. Summer 1995, entire issue. Supermarket tab faces backlash. Stacy Jones, Editor & Publisher, February 1, 1997, page 10. Suspended. M.L. Stein, Editor & Publisher, February 12, 1994, page 23. Taking a cue from abroad. Tony Case, Editor & Publisher, December 25, 1993, pages 11-12. Teen sexuality in a culture of confusion, Dan Habib, Web site:http://www.intac.com/~jdeck/habib/ The accidental spy. Jeremy Bigwood, Columbia Journalism Review, Volume 23, Number 6, 2001, pages 64-69. The Lens of the Beholder: 60 Years of Photographing the Soviet Empire. Michael Specter. The New York Times International, July 14, 1995, page A3. The painted photograph, 1839-1914 : origins, techniques, aspirations. Heinz K. Henisch and Bridget Ann Henisch. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996. The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed Our Lives. Vicki Goldberg. New York: Abbeville, 1993. Tina Modotti: Photographs. Sarah M. Lowe. . New York: Harry N. Abrams & Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1995. Use of visual communication in public journalism. Renita Coleman, Newspaper Research Journal, Volume 21, Number 4, 2000, pages 17-37. Why people photograph: selected essays and reviews. Robert Adams. Aperture, 1994. William Clift. A conversation with Kurt Markus. American Way, May 1, 1995, pages 80-85, 106, 108, 110 & 113. World Press Photo 2001. Gary Schwartz, translated by Loekie Schwartz, Het Financieele Dagblad, 10 February 2001, page 25.
Theory, Research, & Citicism A Vanishing Vision, Russell Miller, Columbia Journalism Review, July/August 2000, pages 38-42. Analysis of Black Images in Comic Strips, 1915-1995. Sylvia White and Tania Fuentez, Newspaper Research Journal, 18:1-2, Winter/Spring, 1997, pages 72-85. Beauty and Dreams of Perfection: The Body Shop. UNESCO Courier. July/August 2001, pages 22-58. Beyond Representation: Toward a Typology of Human Visual Behavior. Julianne H. Newton, Visual Anthropology Review, Spring-Summer 1998, pages 58-72. Black, yet White: A hated color in Zimbabwe. Donald G. McNeil Jr., The New York Times, February 9, 1997, pages A1, 6. Children and the Media. Media Studies Journal, Fall 1994, 223 pages. Communication Theory as a Field. Robert T. Craig, Communication Theory, May 1999, pages 119-161. Comparative Visual Search: A Difference that Makes a Difference. Marc Pomplun, Lorenz Sichelschmidt, Karin Wagner, Tomas Clermont, Gert Rickheit, and Helge Ritter, Cognitive Science, Volume 25, 2001, pages 3-36. Concept mapping: tools for echoing the mind's eye. Jan W. A. Lansing. Journal of Visual Literacy, Spring 1998, pages 1-14, illustrated. Credibility. Rune Pettersson. Journal of Visual Literacy, Spring 1998, pages 61-72. Death in America. Hal Foster, OCTOBER, Winter 1996, pages 37-59. Differences in Television Sports Reporting of Men's and Women's Athletics: ESPN Sports Center and CNN Sports Tonight. C. A. Tuggle. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, Winter, 1997, pages 14-24. Direct Responses to People on the Screen. Communication Research 22(3) June 1995. Documentary Film and the Modernist Avant-Garde. Bill Nichols, Critical Inquiry, Volume 27, Number 4, Summer 2001, pages 580-610. Doing Visual Ethnography: Images, Media and Representation in Research. Sarah Pink, London and Thousand Oaks: Sage, 2001. Facial Affect and Verbal Context in Conversation: Facial Expression as Interjection. Michael T. Motley, Human Communication Research , 1993, pages 3-40. Front Lines and Deadlines: Perspectives on War Reporting. Media Studies Journal, The Freedom Forum, Summer 2001. Gendered Construction of the American Indian in Popular Media. S. Elizabeth Bird, Journal of Communication, Summer 1999, pages 61-83. Getting the Picture. Sherry Ricchiardi, American Journalism Review, January/February, 1998, pages 26-33. Global Media Events in India: Contests Over Beauty, Gender and Nation. Radhika Parmeswaran, Journalism Communication Monographs, Volume 3, Number 2, 2001. History Upside Down, William H. McNeill, The New York Review of Books, May 15-1997, pages 48-50. Identification of Visual Stimuli is Improved by Accompanying Auditory Stimuli: The Role of Eye Movements and Sound Location. Melanie C. Doyle and Robert J. Snowden, Perception, Volume 30, 2001, pages 795-810. Imagining Romance: Young People's Cultural Models of Romance and Love. Christine M. Bachman and Eva Illouz, Critical Studies in Mass Communication, December 1996, pages 295-308. LA Times Offered as Model of Foreign News Coverage. Christopher E. Beaudoin and Esther Thorson, Newspaper Research Journal, Volume 22, Number 1, 2001, pages 80-93. Media and Democracy, Media Studies Journal, Summer 1995. Media and Public Life. Media Studies Journal, Winter 1995, 196 pages. Media Literacy Review, Volume 1, Number 2, Fall/Winter 2001, http://interact.uoregon.edu/MediaLit/mlr/home/index.html, Special Topic: Non-Fiction Film. Messing: Information liminality, dread. Nathaniel Kohn, Cultural Studies: A Research Volume, Volume 4, 1999. Missing the Target. Tony Capaccio and Uday Mohan, American Journalism Review, July/August 1995, pages 18-26. Ms. 25th Anniversary Issue, September/October 1997. Multiple Resource Theory I: Application to Television Viewing, and Multiple Resource Theory II: Empirical Examination of Modality-Specific Attention to Television scenes. Michael Basil, Communication Research, April 1994, pages 177-231. Nanook and his Contemporaries: Imagining Eskimos in American Culture 1897-1922. Shari M. Huhndorf, Critical Inquiry, Volume 27, Number 1, Autumn 2000, pages 122-148. Native American Stereotypes, TV Portrayals, and Personal Contact. Alexis Tan, Yuki Fujioka, and Nancy Lucht. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Summer 1997, pages 265-284. News Icons and the Mainstreaming of Social Change. W. Lance Bennett and Regina G. Lawrence, Journal of Communication, Summer 1995, pages 20-39. News, Gender and Power. Cynthia Carter, Gill Branston and Stuart Allen, editors, London and New York: Routledge, 1998. Plain Reservations: Amish and Mennonite Views of Media and Computers.Donald B. Kraybill, Journal of Mass Media Ethics Special Issue: New Media Technologies, Volume 13, Number 2, pages 99-110. Puns, Public Discourse and Postmodernism. Brock Haussamen, Visible Language, Winter 1997, pages 52-69. Questioning the social powers of art: toward a pragmatic aesthetics. Joli Jensen, Critical Studies in Mass Communication, December 1995. Reflections on News Event Diffusion Research. Everett M. Rogers, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Autumn 2000, pages 561-576. Rehabilitating Stereotypes. Pierre L. van den Berghe, Ethnic and Racial Studies, January 1997, pages 1-16. Role of Imagery in Recall of Deviant News. Prabu David, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Winter 1996, pages 804-820. Seeing the Sites. Sharyn Wizda, Columbia Journalism Review, Volume 23, Number 6, 2001, pages 52-57. Sexual Harassment of Women Journalists. Kim Walsh-Childers, Jean Chance and Kristin Herzog, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Autumn 1996, pages 559-581. Skin Tones and Physical Features of Blacks in Magazine Advertisements. Kevin Keenan. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Winter 1996, pages 905-12. Symposium: The Historicity of the Eye, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 59, Number 1, Winter 2001. Television images and adolescent girls' body image disturbance. Ren_e A. Botta, Journal of Communication, Spring 1999, pages 22-41. The Color of Crime and the Court: A Content Analysis of Minority Representation on Television. Rob Tamborini, Dana E. Mastro, Rebecca M.Chory-Assad, and Ren He Huang, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Autumn 2000, pages 639-653. The Debate Over "Ocularcentrism." Brian Stonehill, Journal of Communication, Winter 1995, pages 147-152. The Emergence of Art and Language in the Human Brain. Erich Harth, Journal of Consciousness Studies, Volume 6, Numbers 6-7, pages 97-115. The Geopolitics of Cyberspace. Blake Harris, Infobahn, premiere issue!, pages 48-53, 86-87. The Idea of Culture. Terry Eagleton, London and Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2000. The Mirror of Television: A Comparison of Black and White Adolescents' Body Image. Renne Botta, Journal of Communication, Summer 2000, page 144-159. The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed Our Lives. Vicki Goldberg, New York: Abbeville, 1993. The Relationship Between Media Consumption and Eating Disorders. Kristen Harrison and Joanne Cantor, Journal of Communication, Winter, 1997, pages 40-66. The Returned: Memory and History in Classic Australian Photographs. Martyn Jolly, Media International Australia, November 1995, pages 100-108. The Swimsuit Issue and Sport: Hegemonic Masculinity in "Sports Illustrated." Laurel R. Davis. Albany: SUNY Press, 1997. Tracking Gender Differences: a comparative analysis of network correspondents and their sources. Carol M. Liebler and Susan J. Smith.Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, Winter, 1997, pages 58-68. Visual Literacy: A Theoretical Synthesis. 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