Media, education, and America's counter-culture revolution : lost and found opportunities for media impact on education, gender, race, and the arts
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Media, education, and America's counter-culture revolution : lost and found opportunities for media impact on education, gender, race, and the arts
Ablex, 2001
- :pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The 1960s and 1970s was a time of repression and a time of freedom, a time of ferment rarely seen before in this country. People marched-in, sat-in, loved-in. The will of the people persuaded one president not to run for reelection, forced another president to resign, and ended an iniquitous war. Social and political revolutions took place: Civil rights, women's liberation, protests against the irrelevancies of education and social norms, a counter-culture revolution on the part of young people. The keys to both protest and change were communications and education.
Dr. Robert L. Hilliard not only observed, but participated in and affected America's counter-culture revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, from the vantage point of several key federal government positions in Washington. Based on his papers and speeches from that period, with current commentary added, this is a revealing look at media and education's lost and found opportunities during that period, and what must be done so that they serve America's needs adequately in the new millennium.
Table of Contents
Motive, Myth, and Media Tuning in and Turning On: The Trouble with Education Is Education School Work and Homework An Open University and School Television and Political Control: A Case for Media Literacy Communications and Minorities Education, Media, and The Inner-City Child Urban Communications: A Plan for Action Women and Communications The Art: Stage, Gallery, and Museum (Out of the Tower through the Tube to the Multitude) A Public Television Alternative to Public Television An Internationl University of Communications Involvement Index
by "Nielsen BookData"