Description |
1 online resource (333 pages) |
Contents |
Setting the scene: pre- independence Irish media -- The new order, 1922-32 -- Affairs of state, 1932-47 -- Coming of age, 1947-57 -- Broadcasting, 1957-73 -- Crossing a watershed, 1973-85 -- Coming to terms, 1985-95 -- Local, national, global, 1995-2000 -- From uncertainty to boom, 2000-7 -- Into the abyss: print media, 2007-16 -- From legacy to hybrid media, 2008-16 -- Coda: Quo vadis? |
Summary |
As Irish media and society move from an insular, domestic focus in the mid-twentieth century to the global outlook of the twenty-first, this book traces how Indigenous media have come to terms with international media players, the role of supranational regulation and the rapid emergence of media forms that know no geographical boundaries. The first edition of Irish media: a critical history in 2001 immediately established itself as the pre-eminent account of how print and broadcast media had developed in Ireland since the foundation of the state. This revised edition extends the period covered backward to the seventeenth century and forward to the twenty-first, and adds online media to the industries covered. It examines the relationship between Irish media and the specific contours of Irish politics, society, culture and the economy, tracing how key events in Irish life -- from the civil war to the post-2008 economic crash -- were reflected in media coverage, and how those events impacted upon media industries |
Notes |
Previous edition published under the title Irish media: a critical history since 1922 |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Mass media -- Ireland -- History -- 20th century
|
|
Mass media -- Ireland -- History -- 21st century
|
|
PSYCHOLOGY -- Social Psychology.
|
|
Mass media
|
|
Ireland
|
Genre/Form |
History
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Flynn, Roddy, author
|
ISBN |
9781846826962 |
|
1846826969 |
|