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In: Journalism quarterly, Volume 67, Issue 4, p. 645-648
This essay explores the links among intellectual history, social history and cultural history. It suggests that the recent turn in American historiography to cultural history is vitally important for communication studies because communication has now been thrust to center stage in virtually every subfield of history. But it warns that communication historians should not rashly and heedlessly jump into cultural history before an adequate foundation has been laid in the economic and institutional social history of mass media.
In: Journalism quarterly: JQ ; devoted to research in journalism and mass communication, Volume 67, Issue 4, p. 645-648
ISSN: 0196-3031, 0022-5533
In: Gender & history, Volume 14, Issue 1, p. 147-151
ISSN: 1468-0424
Books reviewed in this article:Shawn Johansen, Family Men: Middle–Class Fatherhood in Industrializing AmericaMartin A. Berger, Man Made: Thomas Eakins and the Construction of Gilded Age ManhoodMatthew Basso, Laura McCall and Dee Garceau (eds), Across the Great Divide: Cultures of Manhood in the American West
In: Scottish economic & social history, Volume 13, Issue 1, p. 77-84