Vol 18, No 2 (1993)

Communication, the Media, and the Canadian Constitutional Debate

Table of Contents

Editorial

Editorial HTML
Gertrude J. Robinson

Papers

The Mass Media and Political Crisis: Reporting Canada's Constitutional Struggles Abstract HTML
David Taras
Television's Frames in the 1988 Canadian Election Abstract HTML
Matthew Mendelsohn
Government Advertising in a Crisis: The Quebec Referendum Precedent Abstract HTML
Jonathan Rose
Constructions, Deconstructions, and Reconstructions: Competing Canadian Discourses on Ethnocultural Terminology Abstract HTML
Karim H. Karim
Canadian Participation in International Co-Productions and Co-Ventures in Television Programming Abstract HTML
Colin Hoskins, Stuart McFadyen

Commentary

The Constitutional Debate and Communications Policies HTML
Gaëtan Tremblay

Reviews

The American Trojan Horse: U.S. Television Confronts Canadian Economic and Cultural Nationalism HTML
Walt Romanow
The Bias of Communication HTML
Hart Cohen
Getting the Real Story: Censorship and Propaganda in South Africa HTML
Amir Hassanpour
"Hello Central?": Gender, Technology and Culture in the Formation of Telephone Systems HTML
Laurence Basilio Mussio
The Newsmakers: The Media's Influence on Canadian Politics HTML
Peter Desbarats
Television and Its Audience HTML
Pierre C. Bélanger
Desperately Seeking the Audience HTML
Pierre C. Belanger
Media Canada: An Introductory Analysis HTML
David Skinner