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RETHINKING THE MEDIA AS A PUBLIC SPHERE 55

              36 Michael Cockerell,  Live from Number 10, 2nd edn,  London: Faber  &
                 Faber, 1989.
              37 For  a general statement of this  argument, see Paddy Scannell, ‘Public
                 service broadcasting and modern public life’, Media, Culture and Society,
                 vol. 11, no. 2 (1989) to which I am indebted.
              38 Colin  Seymour-Ure, ‘Prime Ministers’ reactions to television:  Britain,
                 Australia and Canada’, Media, Culture and Society, vol. 11, no. 2 (1989).
              39 David Cardiff, ‘The serious and the popular: aspects of the evolution of
                 style in the radio talk, 1928–1939’, Media, Culture and Society, vol. 2,
                 no. 1 (1980).
              40 Paddy Scannell, ‘Broadcasting and the politics of unemployment, 1930–
                 1935’, Media, Culture and Society, vol. 2, no. 1 (1980).
              41 David Cardiff and Paddy Scannell, ‘Radio in World War 2’, in  The
                 Historical Development of Popular Culture in Britain, Block 2, Unit 8,
                 U203, Open University Popular Culture Course, Milton Keynes: Open
                 University, 1981.
              42 Scannell, op. cit., 1989; cf. Curran and Seaton, op. cit., 1991.
              43 David Morley, ‘Industrial conflict and the mass media’, reprinted in Stan
                 Cohen and Jock Young (eds), Manufacture of News, 2nd edn, London:
                 Constable, 1981; Ian Connell, ‘Television news and the social contract’,
                 in Stuart  Hall, Dorothy Hobson, Andrew  Lowe  and Paul Willis (eds),
                 Culture, Media and Language, London: Hutchinson, 1980; Glasgow
                 University Media Group, Bad News, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,
                 1976; Glasgow  University Media  Group,  More Bad News, London:
                 Routledge & Kegan  Paul,  1980; Glasgow University Media Group,
                 Really Bad  News, London: Writers and  Readers,  1982;  Glasgow
                 University Media Group, War and Peace News, Milton Keynes: Open
                 University Press, 1985; Brian McNair,  Images  of the Enemy, London:
                 Routledge, 1988; Schlesinger et al., op. cit., 1983.
              44 Nicholas Garnham, Capitalism and Communication, London: Sage, 1990;
                 Robert Burnett, ‘Economic aspects of the phonogram industry’, in Ulla
                 Carlsson (ed.),  Ekonomiska  Perspektiv  i Forskning Mass-medier,
                 Goteborg: Nordicom-Sverige, 1988.
              45 Svenik  Hoyer, Stig Hadenius  and Lennart Weibull,  The Politics  and
                 Economics of  the Press:  A  Developmental  Perspective, Beverly Hills:
                 Sage, 1975;  Ben Bagdikian,  The Media Monopoly, Boston:  Beacon
                 Press, 1983; Keith Windschuttle, The Media, Ringwood, Victoria: 1985;
                 J. Farnsworth, ‘Social policy and the media in New Zealand’, Report of
                 the Royal Commission on Social Policy, vol. 4, Wellington: Government
                 Printer, 1989;  Facts in Figures,  London: Press  Council, 1989; Ingela
                 Strid and Lennart Weibull, Mediesverige 1988, Goteborg: University of
                 Goteborg, 1988.
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