Examines the pivotal role of the media in creating Soviet society and personhood.
Acknowledgments
Note on Sources
Prologue
Introduction
1. Journalism and the Person in the Soviet Sixties
2. Agranovskii's Essays
3. Journalism against Socialism, Socialism against Journalism
4. Perestroika and the End of Government by Journalism
5. Teaching Tabloids
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Thomas C. Wolfe is Assistant Professor of History and Anthropology and in the Institute for Global Studies at the University of Minnesota.
. . . Governing Soviet Journalism offers an interesting narrative
of the stance of the press across different periods. The material
from the former party archive is particularly interesting. . .
*Journal of Cold War Studies*
. . . Recommended. College and research libraries.
*Choice*
[Draws] on recent theories of media and communication [and] also
deserves to be read as one of the most compelling arguments
available for the utility of the Foucauldian concept of
governmentality. The importance of attending to the ways in which
different kinds of modern subjects have been shaped through the
regulation of the 'conduct of conduct' are nowhere more effectively
and lucidly explored than here. . . .Vol. 7.3 2006
*Miami University*
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