Pages from the Past: History and Memory in American MagazinesUniv of North Carolina Press, 18 thg 5, 2006 - 272 trang American popular magazines play a role in our culture similar to that of public historians, Carolyn Kitch contends. Drawing on evidence from the pages of more than sixty magazines, including Newsweek, Rolling Stone, Black Enterprise, Ladies' Home Journal, and Reader's Digest, Kitch examines the role of journalism in creating collective memory and identity for Americans. Editorial perspectives, visual and narrative content, and the tangibility and keepsake qualities of magazines make them key repositories of American memory, Kitch argues. She discusses anniversary celebrations that assess the passage of time; the role of race in counter-memory; the lasting meaning of celebrities who are mourned in the media; cyclical representations of generational identity, from the Greatest Generation to Generation X; and anticipated memory in commemoration after crisis events such as those of September 11, 2001. Bringing a critically neglected form of journalism to the forefront, Kitch demonstrates that magazines play a special role in creating narratives of the past that reflect and inform who we are now. |
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Kết quả 1-5 trong 86
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... Snapshots in a Family Album Anniversary Celebrations of a Shared Past 154 Epilogue The Present and Future of Media Memory 175 Notes 185 Bibliography 229 Index 243 Illustrations I.I. Life cover, January 2, 1950 I6 I.2. Time Contents.
... Snapshots in a Family Album Anniversary Celebrations of a Shared Past 154 Epilogue The Present and Future of Media Memory 175 Notes 185 Bibliography 229 Index 243 Illustrations I.I. Life cover, January 2, 1950 I6 I.2. Time Contents.
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... life and to define the ''imagined community of the nation.''48 The editors of some of the twentieth century's foremost magazines have understood this. Describing its own influence after fifty years, Life's editors wrote, ''The magazine ...
... life and to define the ''imagined community of the nation.''48 The editors of some of the twentieth century's foremost magazines have understood this. Describing its own influence after fifty years, Life's editors wrote, ''The magazine ...
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... life) and examines how media use the act of memorial to define the celebrity as ''one of us.'' It considers the role of celebrity in American culture as well as the way in which memorialization changes the individual life stories of ...
... life) and examines how media use the act of memorial to define the celebrity as ''one of us.'' It considers the role of celebrity in American culture as well as the way in which memorialization changes the individual life stories of ...
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... life. As a whole, this book offers evidence that magazines have become important social commentators on American life, as well as public historians of national culture—that, as historian Michael Kammen acknowledges of media in general ...
... life. As a whole, this book offers evidence that magazines have become important social commentators on American life, as well as public historians of national culture—that, as historian Michael Kammen acknowledges of media in general ...
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... Life, 1 It's an amazing tale, and like the very best literature, it grabs readers not only with its twists of plot and its resonant themes but also with a collection of characters that dance in our minds, the great men and women ...
... Life, 1 It's an amazing tale, and like the very best literature, it grabs readers not only with its twists of plot and its resonant themes but also with a collection of characters that dance in our minds, the great men and women ...
Nội dung
13 | |
38 | |
Public Mourning for the Dead Celebrity | 61 |
CounterMemory and Living History in Magazines for African Americans | 87 |
Generational Memory and the Reinterpretation of Youth | 109 |
Nostalgia Magazines and Reader Recollections | 131 |
Anniversary Celebrations of a Shared Past | 154 |
The Present and Future of Media Memory | 175 |
Notes | 185 |
Bibliography | 229 |
Index | 243 |
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Pages from the Past: History and Memory in American Magazines Carolyn L. Kitch Không có bản xem trước - 2005 |
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Trang 209 - event,' consequently, is not a decision, a treaty, a reign, or a battle, but the reversal of a relationship of forces, the usurpation of power, the appropriation of a vocabulary turned against those who had once used it...
Trang 64 - That this is so is really quite simple to understand: if liminality is regarded as a time and place of withdrawal from normal modes of social action, it can be seen as potentially a period of scrutinization of the central values and axioms of the culture in which it occurs.
Trang 110 - One is old primarily in so far as he comes to live within a specific, individually acquired, framework of useable past experience, so that every new experience has its form and its place largely marked out for it in advance. In youth, on the other hand, where life is new, formative forces are just coming into being, and basic attitudes in the process of development can take advantage of the moulding power of new situations.
Trang 5 - Action reveals itself fully only to the storyteller, that is, to the backward glance of the historian, who indeed always knows better what it was all about than the participants.
Trang 54 - It was their determination to stick together and to comfort each other that really defines kind of a new spirit that's prevalent in our country, that when one of us suffers, all of us suffer."o6 He lectured on the imperatives of "responsibility...
Trang 115 - Internal" novelty. Journalists judge novelty by whether a story is new to them, assuming that it will then also be new to the audience. Many stories, such as scientific discoveries or new fads, may already be old-hat to their sources. More important, journalists create novelty. Unlike sociologists, who divide external reality into social processes, and historians, who look at these processes over long periods, journalists see external reality as a set of disparate and independent events, each of...
Trang 93 - Counter-memory is a way of remembering and forgetting that starts with the local, the immediate, and the personal. Unlike historical narratives that begin with the totality of human existence and then locate specific actions and events within that totality, counter-memory starts with the particular and the specific and then builds outward toward a total story.
Trang 87 - Negro folklore is not a thing of the past. It is still in the making. Its great variety shows the adaptability of the black man: nothing is too old or too new, domestic or foreign, high or low, for his use. God and the Devil are paired, and are treated no more reverently than Rockefeller and Ford.
Trang 65 - Stars articulate what it is to be a human being in contemporary society; that is. they express the particular notion we hold of the person, of the 'individual'. They do so complexly, variously - they are not straightforward affirmations of individualism. On the contrary, they articulate both the promise and the difficulty that the notion of individuality presents for all of us who live by it.